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Sherwood Schwartz Has Died

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  • Wee67
    Museum Correspondent
    • Apr 2, 2002
    • 10603

    Sherwood Schwartz Has Died

    94-years... A pretty good run and pretty cool legacy. Few filled my childhood afternoons more than he.

    LOS ANGELES -- The man who created "Gilligan's Island" and "The Brady Bunch" has died.

    Great niece Robin Randall says Sherwood Schwartz died at 4 a.m.

    He was 94.



    Schwartz was a veteran comedy writer when he created two of TV's best-remembered sitcoms in the 1960s. Over the years, they have inspired parodies, spinoffs and countless stand-up comedy jokes.

    "Gilligan's Island" featured a hummable theme song telling how a boatload of seven characters, including a professor and a movie star, wound up stranded on an island. Bob Denver played Gilligan, the assistant skipper.

    "The Brady Bunch" featured Florence Henderson as a widow with three daughters who marries a widower with three sons. A bigscreen version, "The Brady Bunch Movie," was a surprise box-office hit in 1995.
    Last edited by Wee67; Jul 12, '11, 12:39 PM.
    WANTED - Solid-Boxed WGSH's, C.8 or better.
  • MIB41
    Eloquent Member
    • Sep 25, 2005
    • 15633

    #2
    RIP Sherwood. He's gone to that grand island in the sky. A very talented and under rated producer.

    Comment

    • Wee67
      Museum Correspondent
      • Apr 2, 2002
      • 10603

      #3
      Better write thru-
      BC-US--Obit-Sherwood Schwartz, 1st Ld-Writethru,910
      URGENT
      Creator of 'Brady Bunch,' 'Gilligan's Island' dies
      AP Photo NYSS102, NYSS103, NYSS101
      Eds: Adds details. With AP Photos.
      By DENISE PETSKI
      Associated Press
      LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Sherwood Schwartz, writer-creator of two of the best-remembered TV series of the 1960s and 1970s, "Gilligan's Island" and "The Brady Bunch," has died at age 94.
      Great niece Robin Randall said Schwartz died at 4 a.m. Tuesday.
      Schwartz was hospitalized at Cedars Sinai Medical Center about a week ago with an intestinal infection and underwent several surgeries. His wife, Mildred, and children have been at his side, said his nephew, Douglas Schwartz.
      Sherwood Schwartz and his brother, Al, started as a writing team in TV's famed 1950s "golden age," said Douglas Schwartz, the late Al Schwartz's son.
      "They helped shape television in its early days," Douglas Schwartz said. "Sherwood is an American classic, creating `Brady Bunch' and `Gilligan's Island,' iconic shows that are still popular today. He continued to produce all the way up into his 90s."
      Sherwood Schwartz was working on a big-screen version of "Gilligan's Island," his nephew said. Douglas Schwartz, who created the hit series "Baywatch," called his uncle a longtime mentor and caring "second father" who helped guide him successfully through show business.
      Success was the hallmark of Sherwood Schwartz's own career. Neither "Gilligan" nor "Brady" pleased the critics, but both managed to reverberate in viewers' heads through the years as few such series did, lingering in the language and inspiring parodies, spinoffs and countless standup comedy jokes.
      Schwartz had given up a career in medical science to write jokes for Bob Hope's radio show. He went on to write for other radio and TV shows, including "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet."
      He dreamed up "Gilligan's Island" in 1964. It was a Robinson Crusoe story about seven disparate travelers who are marooned on a deserted Pacific Island after their small boat wrecks in a storm. The cast: Alan Hale Jr., as Skipper Jonas Grumby; Bob Denver, as his klutzy assistant Gilligan; Jim Backus and Natalie Schafer, the rich snobs Thurston and Lovey Howell; Tina Louise, the bosomy movie star Ginger Grant; Russell Johnson, egghead science professor Roy Hinkley Jr.; and Dawn Wells, sweet-natured farm girl Mary Ann Summers.
      TV critics hooted at "Gilligan's Island" as gag-ridden corn. Audiences adored its far-out comedy. Schwartz insisted that the show had social meaning along with the laughs: "I knew that by assembling seven different people and forcing them to live together, the show would have great philosophical implications."
      He argued that his sitcoms didn't rely on cheap laughs. "I think writers have become hypnotized by the number of jokes on the page at the expense of character," Schwartz said in a 2000 Associated Press interview.
      "When you say the name Gilligan, you know who that is. If a show is good, if it's written well, you should be able to erase the names of the characters saying the lines and still be able to know who said it. If you can't do that, the show will fail."
      "Gilligan's Island" lasted on CBS from 1964 to 1967, and it was revived in later seasons with three high-rated TV movies. A children's cartoon, "The New Adventures of Gilligan," appeared on ABC from 1974 to 1977, and in 2004, Schwartz had a hand in producing a TBS reality show called "The Real Gilligan's Island."
      The name of the boat on "Gilligan's Island" -- the S.S. Minnow -- was a bit of TV inside humor: It was named for Newton Minow, who as Federal Communications Commission chief in the early 1960s had become famous for proclaiming television "a vast wasteland."
      Minow took the gibe in good humor, saying later that he had a friendly correspondence with Schwartz.
      TV writers usually looked upon "The Brady Bunch" as a sugarcoated view of American family life.
      The premise: a widow (Florence Henderson) with three daughters marries a widower (Robert Reed) with three sons. (Widowhood was a common plot point in TV series back then, since networks were leery of divorce.) During the 1970s when the nation was rocked by social turmoil, audiences seemed comforted by watching an attractive, well-scrubbed family engaged in trivial pursuits.
      Schwartz claimed in 1995 that his creation had social significance because "it dealt with real emotional problems: the difficulty of being the middle girl; a boy being too short when he wants to be taller; going to the prom with zits on your face."
      The series lasted from 1969 to 1974, but it had an amazing afterlife. It was followed by three one-season spinoffs: "The Brady Bunch Hour" (1977), "The Brady Brides" (1981) and "The Bradys" (1990). "The Brady Bunch Movie," with Shelley Long and Gary Cole as the parents, was a surprise box-office hit in 1995.
      It was followed the next year by a less successful "A Very Brady Sequel."
      Sherwood Schwartz was born in 1916 in Passaic, N.J., and grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y. His brother, already working for Hope, got him a job when Sherwood was still in college.
      "Bob liked my jokes, used them on his show and got big laughs. Then he asked me to join his writing staff," Schwartz said during an appearance in March 2008, when he got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. "I was faced with a major decision -- writing comedy or starving to death while I cured those diseases. I made a quick career change."
      Besides his wife, Schwartz's survivors include sons Donald, Lloyd and Ross Schwartz, and daughter Hope Juber.
      ------
      Former Associated Press Writer Bob Thomas and AP Television Writer Lynn Elber contributed to this report.
      (Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
      AP-NY-07-12-11 1337EDT
      07-12-2011 17:37UTC / (AP.ny-apm.05a.am-nyny-inwcp01) /
      WANTED - Solid-Boxed WGSH's, C.8 or better.

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      • emeraldknight47
        Talkative Member
        • Jun 20, 2011
        • 5212

        #4
        Bummer. Another great one departed. i bet Heaven's got some GREAT programming going on right about now! RIP, Sherwood...!
        sigpic Oh then, what's this? Big flashy lighty thing, that's what brought me here! Big flashy lighty things have got me written all over them. Not actually. But give me time. And a crayon.

        Comment

        • Blue Meanie
          Talkative Member
          • Jun 23, 2001
          • 8706

          #5
          I think everyone here has seen at least one show that he was involved in. RIP.


          Here's a useless fact about him...He's Lawrence Juber's (Lead Guitarist for the final Paul McCartney and Wings Lineup) Father In Law.
          "When not too many people can see we're all the same
          And because of all their tears,
          Their eyes can't hope to see
          The beauty that surrounds them
          Isn't it a pity".

          - "Isn't It A Pity"
          By George Harrison


          My Good Buyers/Sellers/Traders list:
          Good Traders List - Page 80 - Mego Talk

          Comment

          • Mikey
            Verbose Member
            • Aug 9, 2001
            • 47258

            #6
            He'll always be known for making good clean wholesome shows

            Not a bad thing to be remembered for

            RIP

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